The dust hasn’t settled yet after Britain’s historic vote to cut ties with the European Union, but the seismic shift was already felt across the soon-to-be 27-nation bloc, where calls are being made for similar referendums.

The governments of France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and other countries in the continent face new challenges as they face a realignment of diplomatic and trade relations in the new political landscape.

In France, the political mainstream parties worry about the likely boost Brexit will give the resurgent far-right National Front party less than a year before the country’s presidential elections, the Financial Times reported.

Marine Le Pen, head of the anti-euro, anti-immigration party, has already called for a similar referendum on French membership in the EU, if she gains powers in the elections, the Financial Times reported.

France has “a thousand more reasons to leave than the UK,” Le Pen said in a televised interview.

“We now need to hold the same referendum in France and in (other) EU countries,” she said.

Unlike Britain, France is part of the severely stained eurozone and the Schengen passport-free zone, she noted.

“Whatever the result, it shows the EU is decaying, that there are cracks everywhere,” Le Pen said, describing Brussels as “totalitarian” and requesting a return to a “Europe of the nations,” the paper reported.

France has ‘a thousand more reasons to leave than the UK.’

- Marine Le Pen, National Front

Former President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is mulling a second run for the office, has already intensified his own anti-Brussels rhetoric.

In Germany, officials believe their country can withstand Brexit’s financial fallout — but the political one is another matter.

Berlin is wary about anti-EU sentiment in the bloc’s western heartland, including France and the Netherlands, where people are worried about refugees and terrorism, the Financial Times reported.

EU officials are considering how to rally the remaining member countries and inject enthusiasm for the union.

German pols are skeptical of whether Brussels is up to the task — since many EU voters share Britain’s disenchantment with the Euro bureaucracy.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel would need to act if her country plays a central role, but she has already faced a spate of recent challenges, including the refugee problem, the Greek debt crisis and the Ukraine conflict.

If Germany begins giving orders even more than it does already, it will be more vulnerable to charges of hegemony, the paper reported. If it stays mum, it risks leaving a political vacuum for others to fill.

In the Netherlands, meanwhile, “Nexit” was on the agenda.

Geert Wilders, head of the right-wing, anti-EU PVV party, on Friday tweeted: “Hurrah for the Brits! Now it’s our turn. Time for a Dutch referendum!”

Before the Brexit vote, Wilders delivered a simple message to his country — after the Brits have their say on the EU, the Dutch should have theirs, the Financial Times reported.

“A vote for the [PVV] is a vote for a referendum on a Dutch Nexit,” he said.

A survey by Dutch TV channel Een Vandaag this week revealed that 54 percent of the people in the Netherlands “wanted a referendum of their own,” TRT World reported.

“We want to be in charge of our own country, our own money, our own borders, and our own immigration policy. As quickly as possible the Dutch need to get the opportunity to have their say about Dutch membership of the European Union,” Wilders said.

Italy’s anti-establishment Five-Star Movement has called for the country to “reassess” its relations with the bloc and is questioning whether to keep the euro currency.

The party has suggested that Europe adopt two currencies, one for the rich north and another for southern countries.

“We want a consultative referendum on the euro,” the party’s Luigi Di Maio said. “The euro as it is today does not work. We either have alternative currencies or a ‘Euro 2.’”

The Nordic countries of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden have long relied on Britain for guidance and leadership.

Surveys show that Sweden and Denmark will be among the countries most negatively affected by Brexit.

“I imagine the prime minister will double down on support for the EU straightaway, not least to reduce the threat from populists,” a senior Danish government official told the Financial Times.

Populist parties such as the Danish People’s party and the Sweden Democrats are likely to try to exploit the Brexit vote for their own ends.

The anti-immigration Danish People’s Party urged the government to give the people a voice in the EU debate — calling for its own referendum.

“I believe that the Danes obviously should have a referendum on whether we want to follow Britain or keep things the way we have it now,” party leader Kristian Thulesen Dahl told broadcaster DR, TRT World reported.